Lee and Heimpel ______

IMPACTS OF SUGAR FEEDING ON PARASITOID BEHAVIOR IN THE FIELD

Jana C. LEE1 and George E. HEIMPEL2

1Department of Entomology, University of California–Davis Davis, CA 95616 [email protected]

2Department of Entomology, University of Minnesota St. Paul, MN 55108 [email protected]

ABSTRACT Diversifying agroecosystems with floral habitats has the potential to conserve natural en- emies and enhance pest control. In the laboratory, many adult parasitoids readily utilize nectar sources that have substantially increased their longevity and parasitism rates. How- ever, in the field, does the floral habitat retain parasitoids locally so they exert greater control on pests? We studied the post-feeding and aggregation behavior of insulare 398 (Cresson) (: ), an abundant parasitoid of the , Plutella xylostella (L.) (Lepidoptera: Plutellidae). First, sugar-fed and hungry D. insulare were compared for retention inside cabbage plots (12 x 20 m in 2003; 9 x 15 m in 2004). Sugar- fed and hungry were marked, released inside the plot and recaptured outside the bor- der over 1-3 days. Sugar feeding did not appear to affect dispersal behavior of D. insulare in the field. Second, we determined whether sugar sources attracted/retained parasitoids in the crop field by monitoring the abundance of D. insulare inside cabbage plots (12 m x 20 m) bordered by 3 m wide buckwheat strips and cabbage plots devoid of floral habitat. For three summers, D. insulare were monitored within plots using sticky traps, and the number of adults captured in plots with and without floral borders did not differ. Neither experiment showed evidence that buckwheat flowers increased retention of D. insulare.

INTRODUCTION Establishing nectar-producing floral habitats within or near crop fields can provide adult parasitoids with sugar and reduce risks and energetic costs of commuting between food and host sources (Lewis et al. 1998). Parasitoids orient towards nectar odors (Patt et al. 1999; Wäckers 2004) and floral colors (Wäckers 1994). Thus, the presence of sugar sources in a host patch should retain parasitoids locally. Host patches of five cotton plants with extrafloral nectar and sucrose have retained Microplitis croceipes (Cresson) (Hymenoptera: Braconidae) for 31.5-34.5 minutes whereas host patches without sugar retained parasitoids for 14 minutes (Stapel et al. 1997). Not surprisingly, parasitoids have been found to aggregate more among crops with floral vegetation (Berndt et al. 2002; Irvin et al. 2000; Stephens et al. 1998) or sugar

Second International Symposium on Biological Control of ______Impact of Sugar Feeding on Physiology and Behavior of a Parasitoid

sprays (Jacob and Evans 1998) than crops without such resources. Also, parasitoid abun- dance (Platt et al. 1999) and parasitism rates (Baggen and Gurr 1998; Tylianakis et al. 2004) have been observed to decline in the crop as distance from a floral border increased. Contrary to expectations, an increase in parasitism rates does not always occur in the presence of floral nectar (Berndt et al. 2002; Irvin et al. 2000). The expectation that supple- mentary nectar improves biological control, may not apply if parasitoids have sufficient sugar sources without supplemental floral nectar, parasitoids do not feed from the nectar, or if parasitoid longevity and fecundity are not improved with nectar feeding (Heimpel and Jervis 2005). The parasitoid Diadegma insulare has been studied for some of these criteria; it attacks diamondback moth larvae Plutella xylostella on cruceriferous plants. Presence of supplemen- tary floral nectar sometimes increased feeding by D. insulare (Lee et al. in prep), increased longevity and the number of eggs laid per female per hour (Lee and Heimpel in prep), but had little impact on resulting parasitism rates (Lee and Heimpel in review). The lack of correla- tion between feeding and parasitism puts into question whether the behavior of D. insulare following sugar feeding may differ from expected. While sugar-fed parasitoids may search for hosts immediately near the sugar source, parasitoids may eventually disperse to other host patches. Feeding provides ample carbohy- drate reserves (Fadamiro and Heimpel 2001; Lee et al. 2004; Olson et al. 2000) that fuel flight and may induce dispersal and not retention. Some studies support increased flight activity with sugar feeding. In flight chambers, Trichogramma minutum Riley (Hymenoptera: Trichogrammatidae) given honey showed a small but significant 6% increase in the propen- sity to fly than starved females (Forsse et al. 1992). Whether this would reflect a tendency for 399 dispersal flight is not known. In a field study, Hyposoter sp. (Hymenoptera: Ichneumonidae) wasps were marked with the trace element Rubidium if they fed on marked floral nectar sources; and fed wasps were captured more frequently at 75 m than at 6 m or less from marked plants (Freeman-Long et al. 1998). Parasitoids may also disperse to increase their fitness. First, parasitoids that cannot discriminate between hosts that have been parasitized may leave a patch early than risk super- parasitism and wasting eggs (Rosenheim and Mangel 1994). D. insulare appears to lay eggs randomly among hosts in the field without avoidance of superparasitism (Lee and Heimpel 2004). Or, D. insulare may be dispersing to other patches to avoid inbreeding since this species can have severe inbreeding depression due to its single-locus complementary sex de- termination (CSD) (Butcher et al. 2000). Parasitoids may also disperse to avoid positively density-dependent hyperparasitism (Ayal and Green 1993). Or parasitoids may ‘spread the risk’ in case of widespread mortality occurring in a single host patch, but the conditions for using risk spreading over space are rather stringent (Hopper 1999). While sugar feeding can benefit parasitoids including D. insulare, the impacts that floral sources have on longer-term parasitoid behavior are not known. Our objectives were to determine how sugar feeding influences D. insulare’s dispersal in and out of a host patch at a greater spatial and temporal scale: 12 x 20 m or 9 x 15 m cabbage plot for 8 hours or longer. Also, we compared the number of D. insulare in cabbage plots with/without floral borders for evidence of enhanced attraction/retention.

Second International Symposium on Biological Control of Arthropods Lee and Heimpel ______

MATERIALS AND METHODS

FIELD PATCH STUDY We conducted a mark-recapture experiment on sugar/nectar-fed and hungry D. insulare to study retention in a field plot. A 12 x 20 m cabbage plot with 12 cabbage rows was planted with seedling transplants on 5 June 2003 within a soybean field at the Rosemount Field Sta- tion. Three mark-recapture trials were started on 9, 15 and 23 September 2003. Experiments were conducted late in the season since natural populations of D. insulare had declined, and possible sugar sources such as honeydew from soybean aphids in the surrounding field were not available. Four large sticky traps were set up along each border of the plot, 16 traps total, during the 1st trial. Seven sticky traps were set up per side, 28 total, during the 2nd and 3rd trials (Fig. 1).

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Figure 1. Field plot in experimental soybean field at the Rosemount Field Station.

Sticky traps were 1 x 0.91 m in size composed of grey window screening (mesh size 1 x 2 mm). Traps stood about 40-50 cm aboveground and ~2 m from the plot edge to increase the probability of catching dispersing wasps rather than wasps foraging low for hosts or seeking shelter. Screens were stapled to 4 x 4 x 183 cm wooden stakes pounded into the ground. At 8 am, an aerosol formula of Tangle-Trap® was sprayed onto the screening. Tangle-Trap® was reapplied at noon and at the end of the day. In the following year (2004), a 9 x 15 m cabbage plot with 9 cabbage rows was handplanted with seedlings on 3 June 2004 in the St. Paul Agricultural Experimental Field. Field corn and soybeans were the predominant surrounding vegetation. Weeds were removed by hand and obvious floral nectar sources were not apparent. Mark-recapture trials were started on 18, 24 and 31 July 2004 before natural populations of D. insulare had built up. Seven sticky traps were set up along the length of the plot and six along the width, 26 traps total. In 2003, we used D. insulare from our laboratory colony (1st-3rd generation) started in August 2003 from wild populations. In 2004, we used laboratory reared colonies from both Minnesota and Apopka, Florida. To recruit large numbers of wasps, all wasps emerging 1-5

Second International Symposium on Biological Control of Arthropods ______Impact of Sugar Feeding on Physiology and Behavior of a Parasitoid Wasp

days prior to the release date were randomly assigned to a 30.5 cm2 mesh cage (Bug Dorm, BioQuip®) designated as the hungry or fed treatment. Fed wasps were given buckwheat flowers, 20% sucrose or 20% honey solutions ad libitum. Since D. insulare die in 1-2 days without food (Lee et al. 2004), hungry wasps were initially maintained on the same sugar foods until 20 h before release when only water was provided. D. insulare fed buckwheat nectar metabolize most of their gut sugars when starved for 12-36 h (Lee 2004). Wasps emerging within 20 h of release were also used, those placed in the hungry treatment did not have any opportunity to feed. Before release, wasps were sexed and aspirated in groups of 50 into 1 oz. plastic vials. To mark wasps, they were first chilled for 5 minutes at -10° C, transferred into a 1 oz. plastic cup with 6 mg of pink or yellow fluorescent powder (Day-Glo Color Corp.) and tumbled. This procedure moderately dusts D. insulare without affecting their longevity, and the powder remains visible in their thoracic crevices 13-16 days later despite the wasps grooming themselves (Lee 2004). Wasps were released in the center of the cabbage plot at 9 am. Some overdusted wasps died or moved little. We counted dead/inactive wasps at the release site at 10 am and sub- tracted this number to estimate the number of wasps released. About 500 diamondback lar- vae were sprinkled onto cabbage plants to ensure hosts for females. Sticky screens were monitored every half hour after release of wasps, marked D. insulare were collected and fro- zen with the time, trap number, and height from ground recorded. For the 1st trial in 2003, D. insulare were monitored from 9:00-17:00 on day 1 only. For the 2nd trial, D. insulare were monitored from 9:00-18:00 on day 1, 10:30-15:00 on day 2, and 12:00-14:00 on day 3. During rd the 3 trial, monitoring occurred from 9:00-18:00 on day 1, and 10:00-12:00 on day 2. In trial 401 1 of 2004, wasps were monitored from 9:00-18:00 on day 1, and 9:00-10:00 on day 2; in trial 2 from 9:20-18:00 on day 1, and 8:20-15:00 on day 2; in trial 3 from 9:00-19:00 on day 1, and 8:00-10:00 on day 2. Dead wasps collected during the morning of the second and third day had likely been captured the previous evening because D. insulare are not active at night or early morning (Idris and Grafius 1998). We therefore estimated that they had been caught by 8 pm of the previous day, which is the latest time that D. insulare have been reported active (Idris and Grafius 1998). Wind speeds exceeding 8.5 m/s prevented us from monitoring wasps for a longer duration during trials 1 and 3 in 2003. Collected wasps were frozen at -80° C until egg load determination and biochemical analyses could be done for lipid, glycogen, fructose and total sugar levels as described in Lee et al. (2004). Prior to biochemical analyses, the Tangle-Trap® was removed from wasps using the following protocol. Each wasp was vortexed for 30 s in a 1 oz. plastic cup with 0.5 ml of De-Solv-it® degreasing solvent and then vortexed in 2 ml of distilled water for 30 s and again with new water. Next, each wasp was transferred into a clean cup and vortexed with distilled water twice and blotted dry on a Kimwipe®. The proportion of recaptured water-fed and sugar-fed wasps were analyzed by trial in a Chi-square analysis. The effect of treatment (water or sugar) on height and time of recapture were compared using an ANOVA. Effect of treatment on egg load, lipid, glycogen, fructose and sugar levels of wasps were tested in an ANCOVA with wing length as a covariate. Im- pact of feeding as measured by fructose levels (independent variable) on time and height of recapture and remaining egg load was tested with linear regressions. Analyses were con- ducted in JMP® (SAS Institute 1995).

Second International Symposium on Biological Control of Arthropods Lee and Heimpel ______

AGGREGATION NEAR BUCKWHEAT We monitored the abundance of D. insulare in 12 x 20 m cabbage plots with and without 3 m wide borders of buckwheat Fagopyrum esculentum (Moench) as described in Lee and Heimpel (in review). In 2001, four buckwheat and four control plots were at least 67 m apart from each other and embedded in a soybean field. Another four buckwheat and control plots were spaced at least 800 m apart, embedded in separate soybean fields. These plots are referred to as nearby and isolated. In 2002 and 2003, eight cabbage plots were planted at least 800 m apart and in separate soybean fields. Cabbage plots were not treated with insecticide, and planted in new sites each year. In 2001, four yellow sticky traps (Pherocon®AM) were set up randomly per plot. Traps were 30 cm aboveground and between two cabbage plants to collect D. insulare as they moved along a cabbage row. Traps were collected after one week in the field on 16, 23, 30 August 2001 from nearby plots and 14, 21, 28 August from isolated plots. In 2002-2003, six yellow sticky traps were set up per plot at random points and in the field for one week. Traps were collected on 22, 28 July, 5, 12, 19, 26 August and 2 September in 2002, and on 14, 21, 28 July and 4, 12, 18, 26 August in 2003. We tested the effects of treatment, year, and treatment x year interactions on the total number of D. insulare captured per trap using ANOVA on square- root transformed data. Since trap collections occurred at different times each year, only traps collected during the last three weeks of August were included in the three-year analysis. Male and female D. insulare were distinguished in 2002 and 2003. Average numbers of females captured per weekly trap over 7 weeks were tested in a similar ANOVA described earlier. 402 RESULTS AND DISCUSSION

FIELD PATCH STUDY The field patch study did not support the prediction that feeding would lead to either greater retention or dispersal. Water- and sugar/nectar-fed wasps did not have different nutrient levels in the 1st and 2nd trial in 2003 and in 3rd trial in 2004 (Table 1) to adequately test treat- ment effects. In trial 2 of 2003, more water-fed than sugar-fed D. insulare were recaptured outside the plot but these wasps did not differ in their lipid, glycogen, total sugar and fructose levels. Since there was no physiological difference between water- and sugar-fed wasps, we cannot conclude that feeding enabled wasps to remain in the patch longer. When water and sugar-fed wasps differed physiologically in the 3rd trial of 2003, and 1st and 2nd trials of 2004 (Table 1), there were no significant differences in recapture rates, time and height of recap- ture, and number of eggs remaining in ovaries. Marginal differences were observed twice. Water-fed wasps had marginally greater egg loads than sugar-fed wasps (p=0.062) in trial 1 of 2004. This may suggest that feeding enabled more ovipositional activity, but the analysis was based on only four females. Sugar-fed wasps were recaptured marginally later than water-fed wasps in 3rd trial of 2003 (p = 0.099). This could indicate that being fed enables wasps to remain longer in a host patch (Stapel et al. 1997), but can also occur if sugar-fed wasps simply lived longer and were recaptured later.

Second International Symposium on Biological Control of Arthropods ______Impact of Sugar Feeding on Physiology and Behavior of a Parasitoid Wasp 55.2 41.8 2.5 3.3 3.4, n=6 5.01, n=8 1.5 0.9 3.1 4.5 1.1 0.7 1.5 2.8 =0.38 p=0.54 =0.18 p=0.67 =0.25 p=0.63 =0.01 *p=0.92 =0.36 *p=0.55 =0.07 *p=0.79 =0.27 *p=0.61 =0.05 p=0.82 2 1,55 1,55 1,11 1,52 1,52 1,52 1,52 105.9 116.2 251.7 + 293.6 + 2.9 3.1 5.7, n=9 57.6 + 9.7, n=7 59.5 + 25.0 + 5.2 28.4 + 1.5 22.3 + 23.4 + 4.4 7.1 12.4 + 4.1 15.0 + 8.1 + 0.84 1.20 6.4 + 6.0 + 1.7 5.1 + <0.01 p=0.99 F =0.05 p=0.82 F F =0.61 *p=0.45 =0.04 *p=0.84 F F *p=0.13 =2.4 F *p=0.09 =3.0 F *p=0.02 =5.7 =0.27 p=0.60 X =0.27 p=0.60 2 1,59 1,59 1,12 1,52 1,52 1,52 1,52 45.5 48.7 689.3 + 686.5 + 2.2 19.0 + 3.7 5.2 11.5, n=2 64.2 + 5.0, n=2 65.1 + 33.0 + 2.1 38.7 + 20.5 + 3.8 13.0 7.3 + 7.4 29.6 + 13.5 + 0.6 3.8 5.9 + 1.5 18.7 + 5.8 + =1.2 p=0.30 F =1.2 p=0.30 F =0.04 p=0.85 F <0.01 p=0.93 F =3.9 p=0.07 F =2.5 p=0.14 F =7.1 p=0.02 =103 p=0.06 F =103 p=0.06 =0.07 p=0.79 X =0.07 p=0.79 2 1,13 1,13 1,1 1,12 1,12 1,12 1,12 , average time of recapture, height capture, number eggs in 403 D. insulare 92.1 69.6 112.5 + 184.0 + 5.1 3.8 3.9, n=7 59.3 + 60.4 + 31.5 + 3.0 1.8 2.4 17.1 + 16. 9 + 5.4 7.8 11.0 + 5.8 9.8 + 28.0 + 17.6 + 3.1, n=11 28.0 + 1.0 5.4 + 2.9 3.2 + =2.8 p=0.099 F =2.8 p=0.099 =0.90 p=0.35 F F =0.31 *p=0.59 F *p=0.05 =4.1 F *p=0.06 =3.7 F *p=0.05 =4.0 F *p=0.02 =5.9 =0.07 p=0.79 X =0.07 p=0.79 2 1,53 1,53 1,14 1,46 1,46 1,46 1,46 174.4 645.5 + 109.0 451.5 + 5.1 3.8 3.04, n=17 85.3 + 8.9, n=2 91.3 + 14.1 + 1.8 8.5 + 30.4 + 4.8 6.5 16.6 + 43.2 + 0.8 1.0 6.6 + 14.3 + 2.8 3.5 7.9 + 30.4 + 2.0 27.3 + =5.5 p=0.02 F =0.13 p=0.72 F =0.05 *p=0.82 F =0.12 *p=0.74 F =0.12 *p=0.74 F =0.61 *p=0.81 F =0.06 *p=0.81 F =5.08 p=0.02 X =5.08 p=0.02 2 1,55 1,55 1,15 1,49 1,49 1,49 1,49 102.8 42.4 648.5 + 1131.3 + 9.0 91.3 + 2.3 4.5 8.4 30.7 + 1.4 27 + 35.7 8.3 + 9.2 7.0 + 26.6 16.5 + 5.1 10.1 + 9.0 + 5.4 + 11.1 85.3 + Trial 1-2003 Trial 2-2003 Trial 3-2003 Trial 1-2004 Trial 2-2004 Trial 3-2004 =0.25 p=0.64 F =0.39 p=0.56 F =2.04 p=0.23 F =1.53 p=0.28 F =6.04 p=0.07 F =0.92 p=0.39 F =0.26 p=0.61 X =0.26 p=0.61 2 1,5 1,5 1,4 1,4 1,4 1,4 ovaries, lipid, glycogen, total sugar and fructose levels of wasps. Proportion of recaptured sugar/nectar-fed versus water-fed Recapture—Chi-square test test Recapture—Chi-square 1.4% Water 2.0% 3/221 Sugar 8.45% 4/201 41/485 9.3% X 4.56% + 16/351 10% 20/215 2.19% Water 121.3 8.13% 8/365 35/350 1.91% 33/406 6.22% 9.24% 7/366 25/402 28/303 6.60% + 32/485 Water 105 Water 47, female n=1 + Water 43.4 17.4 + + Water 15.0 + Water 39.1 + Water 27.9 Time of recapture (min)—ANOVA Height of recapture (cm)—ANOVA Eggs in ovaries—ANCOVA length wing as covariate Lipid (µg)—ANCOVA length as covariatewing (µg) —ANCOVA Glycogen length as covariate wing Total sugar (µg)—ANCOVA length as covariate wing Fructose (µg)—ANCOVA length as covariate wing Sugar 17.1 + Sugar 17.1 F + Sugar 30.4 F Sugar 71.75 + Sugar 71.75 F Sugar 113.8 + Sugar 113.8 F analysis F Sugar *no 17 + 3, n=2 + Sugar 34.1 F 17.5 + + Sugar 69.4 F Table 1. *Dead wasps and without wing measurements were not included in the ANCOVA analysis of nutrients eggs.

Second International Symposium on Biological Control of Arthropods Lee and Heimpel ______

Linear regression of wasps from all trials revealed that fructose levels marginally im- pacted time of recapture (p = 0.06) (Fig. 2a). A negative slope suggests that wasps with more fructose were caught earlier in the experiment, contrary to our previous finding that sugar- fed wasps were recaptured marginally later than water-fed wasps in trial 3 of 2003. This might reflect fructose levels having declined more in wasps caught at later times, particularly the next day. Next, D. insulare with higher fructose levels were recaptured higher on the traps (Fig. 2b) suggesting that feeding correlates with flying higher aboveground. If a higher flight level indicates dispersal behavior compared to foraging behavior, this study might sup- port the hypothesis that feeding leads to more dispersal. However, the distinction between dispersal and foraging flight is not known. Lastly, there was no relationship between fruc-

tose levels and the number of eggs remaining in ovaries (F1,72 = 0.50, p = 0.48). Egg load is influenced by ovipositional activity and egg maturation rate. For M. croceipes, fed wasps oviposited more than did unfed wasps in host patches devoid of food (Takasu and Lewis 1995). Our results did not show D. insulare to be as amenable to sugar provisioning for improving biological control as other species. Yet, our experiment may have a limited scope since only wasps moving outside the plot were monitored. Wasps that remained within the host patch might have exhibited different behaviors based on their nutritional state but they were not monitored.

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Figure 2. Linear regression of fructose levels of all D. insulare by (a) time of recapture, F1,239 = 3.56, p = 0.06, 2 y = 572.4 – 3.28 x fructose, r = 0.011; and (b) height of recapture, F1,239 = 12.1, p = 0.0006, y = 70.8 + 0.24 x fructose, r2 = 0.044.

AGGREGATION NEAR BUCKWHEAT From 2001 to 2003, captures of D. insulare per weekly trap during a 3-week period in August

did not differ by treatment (F1,26 = 0.73, p = 0.40) nor by the treatment x year interaction (F2,26

= 0.51, p = 0.61) (Fig. 3a). Captures varied significantly by year (F2,26 = 29.6, p = 0.0001) with the highest captures in 2003. In 2002-03, females were distinguished from males on traps and traps were placed in the field for a longer period of time. Females captured per trap per week

over a 7-week period did not vary by treatment (F1,26 = 0.50, p = 0.49) nor by the treatment x

year interaction (F1,26 = 0.94, p = 0.35) but varied significantly by year (F1,26 = 52.4, p = 0.0001) (Fig. 3b).

Second International Symposium on Biological Control of Arthropods ______Impact of Sugar Feeding on Physiology and Behavior of a Parasitoid Wasp

(a) (b)

50 3 Buckwheat Buckwheat Control Control 40 SE SE 2 30 / trap + / trap

20 1 Diadegma # Females / trap + # Females / trap # 10

0 0 2001 field 2001 isolated 2002 2003 2002 2003

Figure 3. Average number of (a) D. insulare wasps collected per week per trap during three weeks of peak activity, 14-30 August 2001, 12-26 August 2002, and 12-26 August 2003. (b) Average number of females collected per week per trap during seven weeks, 22 July - 2 September 2002, and 14 July - 26 August 2003.

Over three years, buckwheat borders did not enhance aggregation of D. insulare within cabbage plots. This differs from previous studies with buckwheat (Berndt et al. 2002; Irvin et al. 2000; Stephens et al. 1998), although English-Loeb et al. (2003) only found more parasi- toids near the crop edge next to the buckwheat but not in the crop interior. D. insulare might not have responded to buckwheat borders since other sugar sources were present in vegeta- 405 tion surrounding cabbage plots, such as honeydew produced by soybean aphids, Aphis gly- cines Matsumura, that have recently invaded Minnesota soybean fields. However, floral nec- tar can have more attractive odors to parasitoids than aphid-infested leaves (Wäckers and Swaans 1992). Buckwheat flowers are white, a color that may elicit more responses by para- sitoids (Begum et al. 2004). Also, female D. insulare live three-fold longer on buckwheat nectar than soybean aphid honeydew (Lee et al. 2004). Given the superiority of buckwheat flowers to other common foods in the field, we might still expect to find a numerical increase of D. insulare in buckwheat versus control plots. We did not observe such an increase sug- gesting that D. insulare was not attracted or retained by buckwheat flowers. Recent olfacto- meters studies confirm this, both fed and unfed D. insulare showed a little if any response to buckwheat floral odors compared to buckwheat foliage without flowers (Heimpel and Zimmermann, unpublished). An alternative interpretation is that buckwheat may increase local aggregation of D. insulare but feeding also reduces their activity levels such that no differences would be observed in the amount collected in the traps.

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS We thank Kimon Karelis and Jim Karelis at UMORE, Mike McClellan, Simon Hsu, Kathy Kurtz and Dan Barta for assistance. This research was funded in part by USDA NRI Grant no. 9802906, a USDA NCR IPM grant to G.E.H., Doctoral Dissertation Fellowship to J.C.L., and the University of Minnesota Agricultural Experiment Station.

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Second International Symposium on Biological Control of Arthropods Lee and Heimpel ______

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